On 06/25/2017 03:43 AM, Lluís Vilanova wrote: > This series proposes a generic (target-agnostic) instruction translation > framework. > > It basically provides a generic main loop for instruction disassembly, which > calls target-specific functions when necessary. This generalization makes > inserting new code in the main loop easier, and helps in keeping all targets > in > synch as to the contents of it. > > This series also paves the way towards adding events to trace guest code > execution (BBLs and instructions). > > I've ported i386/x86-64 and arm/aarch64 as an example to see how it fits in > the > current organization, but will port the rest when this series gets merged. > > Signed-off-by: Lluís Vilanova <vilan...@ac.upc.edu> > --- > > Changes in v9 > ============= > > * Further increase inter-mail sleep time during sending. > > > Changes in v8 > ============= > > * Increase inter-mail sleep time during sending (list keeps refusing some > emails > due to an excessive send rate).
It's more likely that your rejection message was from your SMTP connection than from the list (I've had to deal with my ISP's SMTP server prohibiting me from sending more than 10 patches in a minute; while using my company's SMTP server did not have that rate-limiting restriction). But yes, it would be neat if 'git send-email' had a knob to easily tweak things to avoid flooding beyond a picky SMTP server's rate limits. -- Eric Blake, Principal Software Engineer Red Hat, Inc. +1-919-301-3266 Virtualization: qemu.org | libvirt.org
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